Widsith is an Old English poem of 143 lines. The poem survives only in the Exeter Book, a manuscript of Old English poetry compiled in the late 10th century containing approximately one sixth of all surviving Old English poetry. Widsith is located between the poems Vainglory and The Fortunes of Men. Since the donation of the Exeter Book in 1076, it has been housed in the Exeter Cathedral in southwest England. The poem is for the most part a survey of the people, kings, and heroes of Europe in the Heroic Age of Northern Europe: see Tribes of Widsith.
Excluding the introduction of the scop Widsith, the closing, and brief comments regarded by some scholars as interpolations, the poem is divided into three 'catalogues', so-called thulas. The first thula runs through a list of the various kings of renown, both contemporary and ancient ("Caesar ruled the Greeks"), the model being '(name of a king) ruled (name of a tribe)'. The second thula contains the names of the peoples the narrator visited, the model being 'With the (name of a tribe) I was, and with the (name of another tribe).' In the third and final thula, the narrator lists the heroes of myth and legend that he has visited, with the model '(Hero's name) I sought and (hero's name) and (hero's name).'
"The depths of the sea, a tunnel of knives
There's a union here while he directs
The chosen rage in the eye of the goat
The golden triangle stands against the sky of fire"
"Come as a reaper for thus you will sow"
No lambs shall live as new Aeon rises
"Blessed are the strong for they shall possess the earth"
And cursed are the weak
"Respect not pity or weakness for they are disease
Which make sick the strong"
New moon with Saturn rising
Forsaken hill-top, the open sky
Priest and Priestess naked
The shining crystal, the invokation starts
"Nythra, Kthunae, Atazoth
Binan Ath, Ga Wath Am"
Dark nebulous chaos
A rend in the fabric of star-studded space
Changes into the dragon - Atazoth has come
The union is over, the star gate is open